“Cuomo Puts the Cart Before the Horse on Fracking—Elected Officials, Leading Environmental and Health Experts Call on Cuomo to Open Health Review to the Public,” Dec. 3, 2012

With thanks to Richard Averett for posting info about Concerned Health Professionals of New York, here is my entire statement from the press conference today in Albany with Barbara LIfton, Matt Ryan, Walter Hang, and Roger Downs of the Sierra Club.  I haven’t seen any media coverage yet.  Sandra



Prepared Remarks, Albany Press Conference, “Cuomo Puts the Cart Before the Horse on Fracking—Elected Officials, Leading Environmental and Health Experts Call on Cuomo to Open Health Review to the Public,” Dec. 3, 2012

 

I am Sandra Steingraber, biologist at Ithaca College

 

I saw some of you last Thursday when I was here to announce the launch of Concerned Health Professionals of New York—an initiative of doctors, nurses, and environmental health researchers.

 

Concerned Health Professionals was launched in response to the secrecy of the ongoing health review, the exclusion of New York State’s own public health experts in the process, and Governor Cuomo’s rejection of our unified demand for a transparent, comprehensive Health Impact Assessment.

 

Not knowing what documents the three outside health reviewers have been asked by DOH to review, we’ve created a website:  www.concernedhealthny.org where we’ve uploaded peer-reviewed studies, reports, and our testimonies and letters to serve as a repository of our many concerns about the consequences of fracking for public health.

 

Since then, we’ve also uploaded an  eight-minute video appeal to the three panelists from three of New York’s leading public health physicians, two nurses, the founder of New York Breast Cancer Network, and myself—an environmental researcher.  In this video, we speak directly to the three panelists about our most urgent concerns.  These include—

 

  • Radium in flowback fluid

 

  • Diesel exhaust and its link to breast cancer risk

 

  • Impaired birth outcomes of newborns born to women living near drilling and fracking operations

 

None of these concerns appear in the last iteration of the sGEIS. We have no idea if they are in the current one or are part of documents pieced together in secrecy by the DOH.

 

Okay.  Can I just say that this is crazy?  Scientists and doctors creating videos and websites funded out of their own pockets to get information and data to our out-of-state colleagues because our collective knowledge has been entirely ignored by our own government?

 

But it gets even crazier.  On Thursday, we learned that draft regulations were being released.  On Friday, we learned that two of the three outside reviews—in whose hands the fate of millions of New Yorkers now lie—are being paid for 25 hours of work.  Twenty-five hours is three working days.  You cannot even READ all the literature on fracking’s health effects in three days.

 

So what should be a linear, deliberative process of decision-making—

 

first, we investigate cumulative health impacts (how many New Yorkers will get sick and die if fracking comes to our state?), then we fold those answers into a larger EIS that examines if said impacts are acceptably mitigatable, and only then, if they are, do those results become the foundation for regulations—

 

what should be a linear process of decision-making is twisted into a pretzel:

 

The regs are out and we can comment on them.

 

But the EIS is not out.

 

And the health study, which should be its basis, isn’t even done, and it’s being carried out in total secrecy, and, oh, yeah, today’s the reported deadline for the receipt of the outside reviewers review based on unknown scoping and three days’ work.

 

That’s not just irrational.  That’s surreal

 

In twenty years of serving on state and federal advisory panels and watching science get turned into policy, I have never seen a more shameful process.  The scientific process behind the decision to frack or not to frack New York is befitting a Third World dictatorship, not a progressive democracy.

 

Here’s what needs to happen:  The process by which the state of New York is evaluating health effects must be opened up to public scrutiny and input.  We must have public hearings.  We must define the broad spectrum of pollutants associated with fracking, document their fate in the environment, identify pathways of human exposure, and investigate long-term health consequences.

 

Until then, the public health community of New York will raise our voices in objection.  Because science is supposed to be transparent, and the Governor’s process has been anything but transparent.  Because this process feels like a series of reactions to attacks from the fracking industry, rather than a deliberative process for implementing sound public policy.

 

It is alarming for the administration to attempt to rush the enormous amount of work that must be done into the next 85 days.  We hope—and demand—that they will step back, see the dangerous path they are on, step out of the backrooms to engage the public, and keep their promise to follow the science.

High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Proposed Regulations – NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation

High Volume Hydraulic Fracturing Proposed Regulations – NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation.  2012

Statement re: DOH Refusal to Share Details on Fracking Health Study

Statement re: DOH Refusal to Share Details on Fracking Health Study.

FOIA Request

DOH Reply

New York State Oil and Gas Searchable Database

New York State Oil and Gas Searchable Database.

DEC Will Reset Regulatory Timeline, Requiring New Public Hearings « Solid Shale

DEC Will Reset Regulatory Timeline, Requiring New Public Hearings « Solid Shale.

Shale Gas – The Bridge to Global Warming?

12_mar_apr.pdf (application/pdf Object).

Shale Gas – The Bridge to Global Warming?

 

Status of Natural Gas Drilling in Town of Homer

Lawrence Jones.pdf.  Homer News.

Status of Natural Gas Drilling in Town of Homer

Shale Gas Review: DEC meeting with enviros suggests SGEIS unfinished Cuomo’s staff wrestles with fracking health questions

Shale Gas Review: DEC meeting with enviros suggests SGEIS unfinished Cuomo’s staff wrestles with fracking health questions.

dec-meeting-with-enviros-suggests-sgeis.html

http://tomwilber.blogspot.com/2012/09/dec-meeting-with-enviros-suggests-sgeis.html

Open letter to Governor Cuomo from scientists and physicians

WCNY TV FM – Connected to YOU – Public Television.

August 7, 2012

Open Letter to Governor Cuomo

Dear Governor Cuomo,

We—the undersigned scientists, medical professionals, elected officials, business persons, and economists – protest the exclusion of qualified, independent experts from the decision-making process to permit or prohibit unconventional development of natural gas from shale formations in New York State.

Letters we have sent to your office and to the Department of Environmental Conservation have received no replies. Requests for meetings with you have received no response. The failure to engage us in substantive discussions contradicts your repeated statement that science, facts, and information will form the basis of your decision.

While our voices have been ignored, the Department of Environmental Conservation has rolled out the red carpet to representatives of the gas industry and engaged them in reciprocal conversation. Gas industry representatives have enjoyed meetings with high-level officials, sneak peaks at the draft environmental impact statement, and same-day responses to emailed requests, as revealed by the recent Environmental Working Group report based on FOIL documents.

As the Albany Times Union reports this week that you are now moving actively to release the revised draft regulations and open parts of New York State to unconventional shale gas extraction via hydraulic fracturing, we write to express our complete loss of faith in the Department of Environmental Conservation. This agency has not only colluded with the gas industry in crafting regulations, its preparations to date are wholly inadequate to oversee the roll-out of an industry and practice as inherently dangerous, secretive, and accident-prone as spatially intensive, high-volume fracking.

Furthermore, we call for the resignation of Bradley Field, the chief of the DEC’s Division of Mineral Resources. Mr. Field is directly responsible for the scientific integrity of the document on which your decision will rest. As a signatory to a petition that denies the demonstrable harm of climate change, Mr. Field has shown himself wholly unqualified for his position.

Governor Cuomo, the “science, facts, and information” that will inform your decision to allow or disallow unconventional shale gas development in New York State is being supplied by a climate change contrarian who works within an agency whose senior officials openly collude with the gas industry and ignore the concerns of independent experts.

You are being badly served.

We believe that “safe” development of shale gas is not possible at this time using existing technologies. Were the DEC objective and inclusive of evidence and facts, it would come to the same conclusion. The best science shows that the moratorium on 2 unconventional development of natural gas from shale formations in New York State should be indefinitely extended. The process as we know it is simply too unpredictable and dangerous to be allowed to go forward in our state.

By extending the moratorium, you have an opportunity to develop a sustainable energy policy in New York State, become an environmental champion, put yourself in harmony with public opinion, and demonstrate that you are making a sciencebased decision. You cannot claim to be listening to science while ignoring what independent scientists have to say. It’s time to do the right thing.

Sincerely,

Lou Allstadt Former executive vice president, Mobil Oil Corporation

Don Barber Town Supervisor of Caroline

Larry Bennett Public relations and creative services manager, Brewery Ommegang

Jannette Barth, PhD Pepacton Institute LLC

Dominic Frongillo Deputy Town Supervisor of Caroline; founder, Elected Officials to Protect New York

Robert Howarth, PhD David R. Atkinson Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology Cornell University

Anthony Ingraffea, PhD, PE Dwight C. Baum Professor of Engineering Cornell University

Adam Law, MD Endocrinologist, Ithaca, New York; Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of London

Deborah Rogers Energy Policy Forum

Matthew Ryan Mayor of Binghamton

Sandra Steingraber, PhD Distinguished Scholar in Residence Ithaca College